Isolated ventricular myocytes from terminal heart failure patients showed higher resting calcium (165 vs 95 nmol/l) and lower peak transients (367 vs 746 nmol/l) compared to healthy donor cells.
Terminal heart failure (dilated or ischemic cardiomyopathy)
Ventricular myocytes from terminal heart failure patients vs Ventricular myocytes from healthy donor hearts
Resting [Ca2+]i levels (nmol/l)
Absolute Event Rate: 165% vs 95%
BACKGROUND: Experiments were performed in human ventricular myocytes to investigate properties of excitation-contraction coupling in patients with terminal heart failure. Myocytes were isolated from left ventricular myocardium of patients with cardiac failure caused by dilated or ischemic cardiomyopathy undergoing transplantation. These results were compared with those obtained from cells of healthy donor hearts that for technical reasons were not suitable for transplantation. METHODS AND RESULTS: Ca2+i transients and Ca2+ currents were recorded from isolated cells under voltage clamp perfused internally with the Ca2+ indicator fura 2. In cells that were stimulated externally, the cell-permeant form of the indicator, fura 2-AM, was used. When action potentials were to be recorded, cells were stimulated in current clamp mode. Unstimulated Ca2+ current densities were not significantly different in myopathic and control cells. In diseased myocytes, resting Ca2+i levels were 165 +/- 61 nmol/l, compared with 95 +/- 47 nmol/l in normal cells. With 5 mmol/l Na+ in the pipette, peak Ca2+i transients were 367 +/- 109 and 746 +/- 249 nmol/l, respectively. The decline of Ca2+i during diastole was significantly slower in myopathic cells than in control cells. This was a result of a prolongation of the action potential and of a reduced Ca2+ sequestration by the sarcoplasmic reticulum. CONCLUSIONS: These results may partly explain the alterations of contractility in vivo in patients with heart failure.
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Beuckelmann et al. (Sun,) conducted a other in Terminal heart failure (dilated or ischemic cardiomyopathy). Ventricular myocytes from terminal heart failure patients vs. Ventricular myocytes from healthy donor hearts was evaluated on Resting [Ca2+]i levels (nmol/l). Isolated ventricular myocytes from terminal heart failure patients showed higher resting calcium (165 vs 95 nmol/l) and lower peak transients (367 vs 746 nmol/l) compared to healthy donor cells.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0d1d886a6e1c7abfdbdad9 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.85.3.1046
D J Beuckelmann
LMU Klinikum
Michael Näbauer
Interventional Cardiology
Erland Erdmann
Heart Failure & Transplant
Circulation
University of Fribourg
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